I recall reading a news article that claimed that the difference between the kids who play a lot of video games and spend a lot of time on the English-speaking Internet, and the kids who do not, is very obvious in the English classes of most Finnish schools these days. Basically the avid gamers get top grades without even trying much.
My personal experience was similar—I learned very little English in school that I wouldn’t already have learned from video games, books, and the English-speaking Internet before that.
That said, this doesn’t contradict the “it takes years to become good” idea—it did take us years, we just had pretty much our entire childhoods to practice.
I recall reading a news article that claimed that the difference between the kids who play a lot of video games and spend a lot of time on the English-speaking Internet, and the kids who do not, is very obvious in the English classes of most Finnish schools these days. Basically the avid gamers get top grades without even trying much.
My personal experience was similar—I learned very little English in school that I wouldn’t already have learned from video games, books, and the English-speaking Internet before that.
That said, this doesn’t contradict the “it takes years to become good” idea—it did take us years, we just had pretty much our entire childhoods to practice.